One Year Incidence of Infection in Pediatric Intestine Transplantation

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Date
2018-05
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English
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Wolters Kluwer
Abstract

Background: This study reports the infection rate, location of infection, and pathogen causing bacterial, fungal, or viral infections in intestine transplant recipients at a pediatric transplant center.

Methods: Records from a pediatric center were reviewed for patients receiving an intestine transplant. Positive cultures and pathology reports were used to diagnose bacterial, fungal, and viral infections and also to determine location and infectious agent. Risk for infection was assessed based on liver or colon inclusion, and immunosuppression induction, as part of the intestine transplant.

Results: During the study period 52 intestine transplants were performed on 46 patients. Bacterial, fungal, and viral infection rates were 90%, 25%, and 75%, respectively. Enterococcus (non-vancomycin resistant enterococci (VRE)) species were the most common pathogens and were isolated from 52% of patients. VRE was present in 12% of transplant recipients. Candida species were the most common fungal pathogens (23% of patients). Respiratory viral infections were common (44%) and cytomegalovirus infection rate was 17%. Common sites of infection were bloodstream, urinary, and upper respiratory tract. Colon and liver inclusion in the transplant graft was not associated with increased risk of infection, nor was addition of rituximab to the immunosuppression induction protocol.

Conclusion: Post-intestine transplant infections are ubiquitious in the pediatric population, including high rates of infection from bacterial, viral and fungal sources. Inclusion of the liver and/or colon as a component of the transplant graft did not appear to greatly impact the infectious risk. Adding rituximab to the immunosuppression induction protocol did not impact on infectious risk.

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Clouse, J. W., Kubal, C. A., Fridell, J. A., & Mangus, R. S. (2018). One Year Incidence of Infection in Pediatric Intestine Transplantation. The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, Publish Ahead of Print. https://doi.org/10.1097/INF.0000000000002104
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The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
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